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Vaccination requirements wouldn't fix this. |
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Vax requirements would also obviously help protect flight staff from getting sick, therefore limiting flight cancellations and economic damage. We know fully vaxxed are far less likely to pass onto others. So there are major health, psychological and economic reasons for a national flight vax requirement. It would also put the U.S. in line with other nations. Also, what is with this constant red herring of "vax doesn't stop all Covid, therefore it shouldn't be required?" Most drunk drivers or gun-toting terrorists won't end up harming someone, so why care? No more law enforcement? Pedophiles won't harm most children in their midst, so no big deal? Teachers can be child molesters? Many stillbirths kill the mother, even with excellent hospital care. So shut the hospitals? Just because something isn't 100% perfect doesn't mean it's ineffective or not worth pursing. |
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Our approach has been, and should always been to keep the hospital system from being overwhelmed. It's clear that won't happen from Covid anymore. But since everyone keeps shifting the goal posts based on making millions feel comfortable traveling....... |
I don't like it but I don't see any other alternative but airlines themselves to enact mandates. No, it won't stop spread but would slow it down. It would either force those who are unvaccinated to get vaccinated or drive. I'm sure flight staff would support it.
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Hospital capacity isn’t being stretched by the current wave (because infections are generally mild). This means that someone else getting sick doesn’t matter to you or me. That means that vaccine mandates are superfluous. It also means that case levels don’t matter. |
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And the CDC now only recommends a 5 day isolation period if asymptomatic (followed by 5 days of wearing masks around others):
https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2...-guidance.html I'm not sure if the evidence is strong enough to warrant this but clearly they're bowing to political pressures. |
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If we continue to have day-over-day of 2k+ flight cancellations for a bunch of mild covid infections, the political calculus starts to sour pretty damn fast. |
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^ Right, but the politicians (especially from one party) have literally just handed the CDC the keys and told them “drive it”.
And that’s why we are in such a mess with so much shitty, mixed messaging |
Correct, the CDC should be only recommending stuff from a medical standpoint. But when the CDC says that people should follow state and local protocols, and then states enact regulations based on CDC guidance, you enter a death spiral where a recommendation becomes law. At least, that's the way it was about a year ago before vaccines became widely available.
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Covid: Evidence does not support more England curbs - minister
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-59807241 Here’s the big “duh” statement: Quote:
The problem is not the virus, it’s all the testing and isolation rules when people aren’t actually getting sick anymore. Some people will still die but always will. They die of flu or even a bad cold, if they’re old and frail enough. That’s life. Note the Easter timing mention. That seems consistent with the government moving to treat it like a cold/flu from end March as I was told a month or so ago (but that was from someone in government, not a public source). |
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